303
In World War 1 and 2 the ANZAC forces primary rifle was the Short Magazine Lee-Enfield Mk. III (SMLE Mk. 3) which fired a .303 round but due to varying ways in which calibre is measured was actually .311 of an inch.
In World War 1 and 2 the ANZAC forces primary rifle was the Short Magazine Lee-Enfield Mk. III (SMLE Mk. 3) which fired a .303 round but due to varying ways in which calibre is measured was actually .311 of an inch.
Standard issue rifle for British Commenwealth troops (which included the Anzacs) was the .303 calibre Lee Enfield rifle.
Commonly referred to as .303 British service. Also known as 7.7x56R in metric measurements.
for a rifle it is thought to be a .50 calibre but a gun company made there own for there own sniper rifle the .408 calibre
The .243. It's basically a necked down .308 Winchester.
The M16 is a gas operated, semi automatic assault rifle with a calibre of 5.56mm, used most commonly by U.S Forces and other countries.
This all depends on the calibre of said rifle make and model :)
The Winchester Company introduced the 32 Calibre rifle in 1873. For it they created four different types of bullets including the Winchester 32 special.
Each Anzac soldier was issued a standard .303 calibre Lee Enfield rifle. At Gallipoli they did not have proper bombs (grenades) so made their own out of jam tins and bits of barbed wire and stuff. They were also equipped with a bayonet (a long blade that was attached to the end of a rifle). Some also made crude clubs and stuff for hand-to-hand battles and trenchraids.
It's Japanese, and the rifle uses the 7.7x58mm Arisaka cartridge.
For a rifle it would be the 2 Bore.